cloud for logo

On 26 February 2025, the European Commission presented a revolutionary and long-awaited document – the Clean Industrial Deal – a new EU strategy to strengthen the competitiveness of the European economy. It focuses on electrification and prioritises the increase of “green” production capacity.

Having felt its vulnerability to price fluctuations on the global energy resources market, as well as suffering from fierce global competition, European industry felt that it needed support. Therefore, the presented Clean Industrial Deal (the Deal) provides for concrete measures to turn the decarbonisation policy into a driving force for its growth and development. The measures concern, in particular, lowering energy prices, creating quality jobs and forming favourable conditions for doing business.

Thus, the objective of the Deal is to strengthen every stage of the production process, with particular attention to:

  • energy-intensive sectors of the economy, such as the production of steel, metals and chemical products,
  • the clean energy technology sector, which possesses a significant level of competitiveness and is an integral aspect of ensuring industrial transformation and decarbonisation, as well as
  • the development of the circular economy, the aim of which is to reduce production waste and extend the life cycle of materials through the active implementation of best practices in recycling, reuse and sustainable production.

The main elements of the Deal

  • Ensuring the availability of energy. That is, the accelerated deployment of clean energy and electrification, the completion of the integration of the internal energy market through physical cross-border interconnections, the more efficient use of energy and the reduction of dependence on fossil fuel imports. The implementation of this element is also regulated by a separate Action Plan for Affordable Energy.
  • Stimulating demand for clean products. That is, the introduction and observance of sustainability and resilience criteria in the production of goods, as well as support for the “made in Europe” label during public and private procurement. For this purpose, in particular, the European Commission plans to revise the Public Procurement Framework in 2026.
  • Financing the clean transition. That is, the adoption of new rules on state support and subsidies for renewables, the decarbonisation of industry and new production capacity; the strengthening of the Innovation Fund and the creation of an Industrial Decarbonisation Bank, which will be filled by the Fund, by revenues from the emissions trading system and by an updated InvestEU programme; the stimulation of scientific research and innovation through Horizon Europe, etc. All of this in order to mobilise more than €100 billion in support of clean production in the EU.
  • Increasing access to and ensuring a more sustainable use of resources. That is, the creation of a mechanism for the joint ordering of critical materials in order to improve supply conditions; the establishment of an EU Critical Raw Materials Centre, responsible for joint procurement; the adoption of a Circular Economy Act in 2026, which envisages the use in the EU of at least 24% of production materials on circularity terms by 2030.

The role of wind energy for the Deal

Wind energy is Europe’s own (local), competitive and scalable resource. It is precisely this energy sector that offers unique opportunities to implement all aspects of the Deal and to satisfy the growing demand for electricity that is forecast up to 2040. For example, according to WindEurope data, for the chemical industry this demand will grow from 195 TWh in 2030 to 290 TWh in 2040, for the cement industry – from 32 TWh in 2030 to 76 TWh in 2040, and for the aluminium industry – from 70 TWh to 100 TWh respectively. Therefore, given the prospect of scaling and a rather high capacity utilisation factor – 1 GW of wind energy produces twice as much electricity as the equivalent capacity of solar – it is precisely wind energy that is capable of satisfying this demand. “If in the 2030s the EU maintains a stable level of wind generation deployment – 30 GW annually (of which 20 GW is onshore and 10 GW offshore)”, says WindEurope, – “then electricity production from wind will increase almost fourfold compared to today’s level, reaching 1,830 TWh by 2040”.

Global partnership

However, to implement the Deal, the EU needs reliable global partners. Therefore, in addition to expanding trade agreements, the European Commission also plans to launch Clean Trade and Investment Partnerships to diversify supply chains, to use trade defence mechanisms for the sake of economic security and to strengthen the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) to ensure fair pricing of CO₂ emissions in the production of energy-intensive products.

What does this mean for Ukraine?

The Clean Industrial Deal is an opportunity for Ukraine to integrate already into the new economic model of the EU, which offers more security and predictability. Ukraine has a unique chance to become an important partner in providing the EU with critical raw materials, “green” energy and clean technologies. Thanks to its resources, geographical location and industrial potential, Ukraine can join the European industrial transition and, accordingly, receive new investment. However, for this it is necessary to: accelerate the decarbonisation of industry by developing renewables; build up modern processing capacity; promote the development of national production of “green” technologies, in particular wind turbines and their components; as well as actively cooperate with the EU in the field of critical materials.

The Clean Industrial Deal: https://commission.europa.eu/topics/eu-competitiveness/clean-industrial-deal_en

Share:

News

Membership and partnership

ENERCON Altelaw&Sempra State Agency on Energy Efficiency MCL UA RENERGY Public Union “All-Ukrainian Energy Assembly” UTA (Urban Technology Alliance) VOLTAGE GROUP CRANE UKRAINE UKEP LLC ODESKRANSERVICE Nordex Group MHP TAD Dentons Ukrhydroenergo Vitry Khmelnychchyny FRIENDLY WINDTECHNOLOGY Sika Fenix Repower Institute of International Relations Elementum Energy Niras Baker McKenzie New Energy Development WPD Ukrainian Bar Association GREEN SYSTEM STRUCTUM LLC National Aviation University Dnipro Polytechnic CMS GEO-NET AdviRES The Institute of Renewable energy of the NAS of Ukraine LLC “Sit in Set International Co” Negabarit-Service JSC “Energy Company of Ukraine” Acquis Law Firm Electroservice-Yug LLC  Chemlaborreaktiv LLC CKS Kinstellar S POWER FACTOR NedZero COWI KENK UDP Renewables KPMG YUZHMASH Bureau “VINK” LLC Katwind Enerji SEMIKS BETON Emergy AS Ingenieursozietät Prof. Katzenbach GmbH CWP Ukraine LLC INTEGRITES SPP Development Ukraine The CLEAR ENERGY Ternopil Ivan Puluj National Technical University Güriş JSC “WEST FINANCE AND CREDIT BANK” Gattowind UA Notus Energy Wind Power LLC Dealex Transport Ukraine Eco-Optima Віндкрафт Україна Odesenergomontazh LLC Naftogaz Bioenergy Zolin LLC  Gresa Group WIND FARM UN Global Compact Ukraine Ukrgasbank ACCIONA Energy Bureau Veritas ENERPROF Group KNESS Singa Energies ETR Renewable Power s.r.o. VIKOS TUSIB PRYKARPATTYA ALTERNATIVE POWER LLC Business in Wind Institute of General Energy of NAS of Ukraine Atlas Global Energy Horizon Capital OVERSIZE s.r.o.  ENERGY TRADE GROUP (ETG.UA) Sayenko Kharenko Trancom INIKTI EnerLoop International Online Platform Asters LLC “Scientific Ecological Center ‘Green Square” Green Power Denmark Hareket CHESM КСП-ПРОЕКТ Greenville Energy Южне Енерджі DWS Cemark та Astor Dragon Capital Metropoliya science and technology company LLC VITAGRO ENERGY Rystad Energy Navitas Renewables Siemens Energy ERU Green Power Sweden EVERLEGAL DENZAI Legiontrans МЦ Баухемі ІКNЕТ Huawei Deutsche WindGuard Vestas MOSTY UKRAINE 1 LLC The “Oсean” Plant Stable Energy Arzinger GE Vernova EuroCape ТОВ «Керуюча компанія «Вітряні парки України» LCF Chervonohrad Lyceum

Members and partners of UWEA can be national and international companies and organizations that share the statutory goals and vision of the association, and are also ready to contribute to the development of the national wind energy market on the basis of honest partnership and mutual assistance.